Dr Ed Mitchard - Measuring Forests from Space

Duration: 50 mins 1 sec
Share this media item:
Embed this media item:


About this item
Image inherited from collection
Description: Dr Ed Mitchard of the University of Edinburgh speaks about his work developing new methods to map changes in forests, especially using radar and LiDAR data, with a view to supporting policy efforts to reduce and reverse deforestation.
 
Created: 2016-12-01 14:04
Collection: The Gatsby Plant Science Summer School Lecture Collection
Publisher: University of Cambridge
Copyright: University of Cambridge
Language: eng (English)
Distribution: World     (downloadable)
Credits:
Person:  Dr Ed Mitchard
Director:  Harriet Truscott
Editor:  Leeds Media Services
Categories: iTunes - Science - Biology
Explicit content: No
Aspect Ratio: 4:3
Screencast: No
Bumper: UCS Default
Trailer: UCS Default
 
Abstract: Forests cover about a third of the Earth’s land surface (and just 9.5 % of its total surface once accounting
for oceans), and yet perform about 60 % of the Earth’s photosynthesis and hold over 95 % of the Earth’s
biomass. Yet this area has reduced with accelerating rapidity over the past few thousand years as humans
have converted forests to agriculture, pasture and urban areas. Only since the launch of earth observation
satellites in the 1970’s were we able to start tracking this forest loss, and technological and methodological
advances mean we can now map forest extent with high accuracy, supporting policy efforts to reduce and
reverse deforestation.

However, forests are highly diverse, and are themselves changing rapidly. Photosynthesis rates are far higher
in a world of >400 ppm CO2 than the 280 ppm of the 1850s so forests globally are increasing in biomass as
rates of tree growth exceed losses from tree death. At the same time forests are being degraded by selective
logging and fuel gathering, with estimates suggesting that as much of half of the world’s tropical forests
are in some way or other disturbed. Conventional Earth Observation methods largely do not allow for
distinguishing changes in the structure of forests: forests appear as a blanket of green.

I will talk about my work developing new methods to map changes in forests, especially using radar and
LiDAR data, concentrating on the route from field data collection in remote parts of Cameroon and Gabon to
new pantropical maps. I will also discuss research impact: how I try to ensure governments implement more
sensible monitoring methods, and my work on web tools to democratize access to large geospatial datasets.
Available Formats
Format Quality Bitrate Size
MPEG-4 Video 640x360    1.81 Mbits/sec 680.15 MB View Download
WebM 640x360    1.17 Mbits/sec 442.11 MB View Download
iPod Video 480x360    490.88 kbits/sec 179.83 MB View Download
MP3 44100 Hz 249.77 kbits/sec 91.59 MB Listen Download
Auto * (Allows browser to choose a format it supports)